Anand displayed his technical prowess and had Vallejo off-track with some brilliant ideas in the game and even though it would go down as a blunder by the Spaniard it was clear that the Indian ace plotted it.
Maintaining a clean slate after two games, Anand took his tally to six points under the soccer-like scoring system in place here and the Indian will now take on Levon Aronian of Armenia in what seems like an early summit clash in the four-players double round-robin tournament.
As things stand, Anand on six points is followed by Aronian on four, followed by Vallejo Pons who just has one point to his credit. Ponomariov, who lost to Anand in the opener, is reeling at the bottom yet to open his account.
Anand made his intentions clear for a fighting game by going for the sharp Ragozine defense as black against Vallejo.
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"Basically we played a very interesting theoretical line where white has a very dangerous pawn in return for the exchange, my impression was it was balanced throughout, can't be sure without checking," said Anand in the post-match conference.
"I thought I found this right manoeuvre not to get worse, and then suddenly my opponent got a bit confused (as) he was quite a bit short of time, the problem for him was that he blundered the game away in one move so he was quite unlucky," Anand said matter-of-factly.